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Research Article
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A research article is a formal piece of academic writing that presents findings, analyzes existing literature, or argues a position grounded in evidence. In education courses, students are frequently asked to engage with research articles either by summarizing them, critiquing their methodology, or using them as the foundation for a broader argument. The exercise appears across disciplines — from healthcare policy and psychology to social issues like same-sex marriage and fast food and obesity — because learning to read and respond to scholarly sources is a transferable academic skill. The wide subject range reflects how central research literacy is to undergraduate and graduate study alike.

The papers archived under this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on summarizing and evaluating a specific article's argument, methodology, and conclusions, as seen in work addressing gun control attitudes, depression, and AIDS and HIV. Others use a research article as a launching point for persuasive writing, particularly on issues like fast food and obesity or social media's impact. A smaller group addresses professional or pedagogical practice, examining topics such as instructional planning procedures, teaching writing to English as a second language high schoolers, and team-based organizational learning.

A strong essay in this category begins with a clearly scoped thesis that goes beyond summary — identifying what the source argues, how it supports that argument, and what its limitations are regarding population, methodology, or scope. Evidence drawn directly from the article, including the author's own claims and data, carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating summary as analysis; restating what an article says is not the same as evaluating whether its conclusions are well-supported.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
RLS 360 questions and assessment topics
¶ … Communication is the exchange of information between two people. Ti represents an agreement as to what the meaning and context of words and phrases mean. Language is imprecise and there are many differences in what…
Essay Doctorate
Null and alternative hypotheses in leadership theory research
Nurses' Practice Environments, Error Interception Practices and Inpatient Medication Errors (2012)
Essay Doctorate
Age and Learning a New Language What
What is the ideal age for a person to be able to learn a new language? What are the dynamics (besides age) that contribute to SLA? This paper delves into those subjects using scholarly articles as resources.
Research Paper Doctorate
Social Research Activities, Whether Empirical, Literature Review
Research activities, whether empirical, literature review sponsored, descriptive, or historical, must exhibit and command interest, enthusiasm, and passionate commitment. It is vital that the researcher catch the…
Essay Doctorate
Gun control attitudes and criminal justice student differences
¶ … Payne, B. & Riedel, R. (2002). Gun control attitudes criminal justice student: differences
Research Paper Doctorate
Female genital mutilation: prevalence, health effects, and prevention
Female Genital Mutilation -- a Review and Analysis
Research Paper Doctorate
Female Substance Use Disorder Gender
Gender Affects Relationships Between Drug Abuse and Psychiatric Disorders, an article in the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), NIDA Notes (Swan, 1997), reports that when women had the dual problem of depression…
Thesis Masters
Saints and the Roughnecks
and reaction to delinquency amongst teenagers in a specific town. more specifically, the researcher ended up identifying a difference in the way teenage boys of different socioeconomic backgrounds were viewed by teachers, the police, and other community members in light of their delinquency, though it is not clear that the research understood this to be the central problem when the research was initiated. As currently published, however, it is clear that the central identified problem is the lack of consistency
Essay Doctorate
Webster Et Al. 2007) Is Effective Because
Attitude is one of the vital and essential components for developing an insight for others, which seems to have diversity over time. The attitude articulates the general perception, beliefs, viewpoint of a particular person and the way of thinking towards an object, event, person, religion or a country and can either be in positive or negative form. Different people have diverse and dissimilar attitudes based on their beliefs and living standards. Indeed, in certain occasions, individuals can also have conflicting and vacillating attitude (that is both positive and negative) towards a particular object at the same time (Bohner, 2002, pp. 4-10).
Paper Undergraduate
Social Work Technology Anxiety: Survey Research Methodology
The field of social work is known for human interactions and in-person communication (Oliver-Parker & Demiris, 2006), yet, as the profession adapts to the increased use of technology, there are concerns that this change will cause a distancing from clients needing to be served (Ashery, 2001) and depersonalization of the profession. Despite published guidelines by the National Association of Social Workers, as well as requirements by federal and state governments regarding the implementation of technology into the field, the social work profession has been, in many ways, adverse to the change. Although the complete gamut of social work specialties are adapting to the use of technology, those working in Child Protection Services (CPS) are under specific pressures to acclimate (Glicken, 2007). Studies show there are numerous advantages and disadvantages to using technology in social work. Specifically it helps to provide for greater access to services for clients (Camilleri & Humphries, 2002) and assists in promoting accountability, consistency, transparency (Burton & van den Broek, 2009). Other issues are inequalities in access to resources and threats to confidentiality and depersonalization (Oliver-Parker and Demiris, 2006). Additional studies point out differences in levels of anxiety and confidence related to age, prior technology use, length of time in using specific technology and training